(SEATTLE – May 28, 2021) – The Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce on May 26 endorsed King County Proposition 1, a renewal of the Best Starts for Kids Levy. This measure will appear on the August primary election ballot, and if approved, would levy a property tax of 19 cents per $1,000 in assessed value, a 5-cent increase over the rate of the existing levy.
“Investing in our youngest residents – our future leaders – is a down payment on a more competitive and inclusive regional economy over the long-term,” said Rachel Smith, President and CEO of the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce. She added, “The Best Starts for Kids program brings a track record of measurable success and is the most comprehensive investment in child development in the nation. This renewal measure builds on that success, and also invests in expanding access to childcare for low-income families, which is critically important to an equitable economic recovery.”
Best Starts for Kids was passed by the voters for the first time in 2015. The Chamber was among the organizations that endorsed the original levy, which has so far served 490,000 young children and 40,000 youth and young adults.
Best Starts for Kids is different from, and complements, the state’s recently passed Fair Starts for Kids Act, which invests in childcare and early learning and Seattle’s Families, Education, Preschool and Promise levy, which focuses on preschool expansion.
If renewed, Best Starts for Kids would support programs in four main categories:
- Children prenatal to age 5 (50% of funds): These investments include breastfeeding support, home visits for parents, and access to essential needs like car seats and diapers.The levy renewal also includes a new childcare program to provide subsidies for 3,000 low-income families. The childcare program is designed to provide for families who meet the income requirements for state childcare subsidies (Working Connections Child Care) but are ineligible for various reasons. This includes families with parents who are students or in training programs, parents who are unemployed and seeking employment, families who are undocumented, and families who are experiencing or at risk of homelessness.
- Children and young adults ages 6-24 (35% of funds): These investments would support out-of-school services including before- or after-school care and career-readiness programs, like the Work Training Education program.
- Community investments (10% of funds): Best Starts also seeks to build community capacity and has collaborated with more than 150 organizations to create more than 241 community partnerships, according to King County.
- Data collection and evaluation (5% of funds).
The distribution of levy funding is designed to correlate with the experience of childhood poverty: with 30-40% in south King County, 30% in Seattle, 10-15% on the Eastside, and the remainder in north King County.
CONTACT:
Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce – Jillian Henze, APR: 425-785-6731; jillianh@www.seattlechamber.com